“…Children (and adults) with intellectual difficulties are vulnerable to maltreatment, but their allegations are less likely to progress through the legal system. This may be due, in part, to investigators’, prosecutors’, and jurors’ doubts about the ability of children with intellectual disabilities (CWIDs) to provide meaningful, detailed, and reliable information (e.g., Brown & Lewis, ; Henry, Ridley, et al ., ; Peled, Iarocci, & Connolly, ), and concern that prosecutions will therefore be unsuccessful (Aarons & Powell, ; Aarons, Powell, & Browne, ; Ericson, Perlman, & Isaacs, ; Nathanson & Platt, ). Developing evidence‐based recommendations for obtaining reliable information from CWID is important to facilitate their increased participation in legal proceedings (Henry, Bettaney, & Carney, ).…”